This side of oral culture and of print

Public lecture from Ong's Lincoln Lecture series. Ong's summary: "When a culture moves from oral communication, to writing, then to print, and then to electronic communication, it does not merely improve its ways of dispersing or spreading information but also alters its thought proc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ong, Walter J.
Format: Online
Language:eng
Created: Saint Louis University Libraries Digitization Center 1974
Online Access:http://cdm17321.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/ong/id/821
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Summary:Public lecture from Ong's Lincoln Lecture series. Ong's summary: "When a culture moves from oral communication, to writing, then to print, and then to electronic communication, it does not merely improve its ways of dispersing or spreading information but also alters its thought processes. This is true of all cultures. Western European culture has moved through these stages slowly, with consequences which Professor Ong has been studying and writing about for two decades and which this lecture treats. African cultures have entered into these stages at different paces, with present consequences which it is hoped the audience will wish to discuss."